Travel Europe on the cheap with this updated guide, the ideal companion whether you're on a city break, beach vacation, or road trip. The locally based Rough Guides author team introduces the best places to stop and explore, and provides reliable insider tips on topics such as driving on European roads, how to find the best local shops, or where to find safe hostels. You'll find special coverage of European history, art, architecture, and literature, and detailed information on the best markets and shopping for each area. The Rough Guide to Europe on a Budget also unearths the best restaurants, nightlife, and places to stay, from backpacker hostels to beachfront villas and boutique hotels, and color-coded maps feature every sight and listing. Make the most of your time with The Rough Guide to Europe on a Budget . Series For more than thirty years, adventurous travelers have turned to Rough Guides for up-to-date and intuitive information from expert authors. With opinionated and lively writing, honest reviews, and a strong cultural background, Rough Guides travel books bring more than 200 destinations to life. Visit RoughGuides.com to learn more.
Founded in 1982, Rough Guides Ltd is a British publisher of print and digital guide book, phrasebooks and inspirational travel reference books, and a provider of personalised trips. Since November 2017, Rough Guides has been owned by APA Publications UK Ltd, the parent company of Insight Guides. With the company's personalised trip service encompassing over eighty destinations, and 200 guidebooks covering 180 destinations, Rough Guides is a multi-faceted travel platform, with global sales of 100 million guidebooks since their inception.
As the other reviewer stated, this would be a great guide for first time travelers to Europe. I am not convinced on the "budget" aspect though aside from suggesting campgrounds and lower-priced hotels, especially since about every page had a "splurge" item. But if you're considering a number of places, this is a great book just to try and compare everywhere at once.
Only good if you use it as a starting point. Always google places you want to visit and use trip advisor to determine interesting attractions. Several places named are closed, prices are misquoted. Best/cheapest hostels and restaurants left off.
I will probably never find myself traveling to Europe but I loved this read. It had a quick history timeline to each area, as well as information on how each place varies from how things are here in the states (such as a head nod means "no" and a quick shake of the head means "yes" in Bulgeria).
This is a generally useful guidebook, but it suffers from two principle flaws: 1. Not enough price information. A "budget" guidebook should not list train and bus options between towns without giving their price. It makes planning very difficult. While they give some price info for accommodation and restaurants, it was not as specific as it could be. Publishers: don't list a single good, service or experience in a budget guidebook without listing the cost! 2. Too broad. Since it attempts to cover the whole continent in a single book, this means there is very little information on any given city. While I should have known this when I bought the book, it also would be better if they offered regional (Eastern and Western Europe) multi-country books.
Again, this was a decent guidebook without any significant flaws beyond those two, but solely because of flaw #1 I'll be going with Lonely Planet next time.
My faithful guide has not yet let me down!!! Sure, it's not heavey on background or details, but it has all the countries you'll want to see and all the important tourist spots in (at least) the capital cities. It's been very accurate on prices and transport (for 2009) and although this can't be the only guide you'll use for a long trip, it's great for weekends or short stopovers.
huge travel book first impression that it is of no use .. to much information in one place, so the content cant be that organized and complete. And yes it's not. Seams to be the worst possible travel guide ever, you can buy it just to have an overview of the country where you wanna go, then buy a specific/per country travel guide but i don't recommend it.
I liked that they had a lot of details from local people and they included main attractions as well as things off the "beaten" path that would be less money and less crowded.
If you want a general overview of the sights to see, or some lodging idea it is a good book. Otherwise, it's not worth the money. It does not give specific details, so you can't rely on it.
do yourself a a favor, and don't be a cheapskate and try to save money by buying a general guidebook when you need one that provides more than 6 pages on major cities.